Source: https://www.rt.com/news/524782-pardon-snowden-court-ruling/
May 25, 2021
By RT
After winning a landmark ruling against the UK’s GCHQ spy agency (1), activist groups praised former NSA contractor Edward Snowden for blowing the lid off the UK’s surveillance regime. Activists called yet again for his pardoning.
In a ruling issued on Tuesday morning, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) declared that GCHQ’s bulk interception of online communications, which was first brought to light by former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden in 2013, was illegal.
Read more
UK GCHQ spy agency’s bulk interception of communications ‘not in accordance with the law,’ European court rules https://www.rt.com/news/524762-uk-gchq-european-court-human-rights/
In its findings, the ECHR found three “fundamental deficiencies” in the GCHQ’s interception process: it had been authorised by a politician and not an independent body, search terms that would be flagged by the spy agency had not been included in the application for a warrant, and search terms linked to individuals – for example names, email addresses, and phone numbers – had not been authorised internally prior to their use.
Former Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger, who published Snowden’s revelations in 2013 and destroyed hard drives belonging to the whistleblower rather than handing them over to the government, celebrated the ruling. “It’s taken a long time,” he tweeted, “but turns out @Snowden was right.”
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https://twitter.com/arusbridger/status/1397134410873511936
Big Brother Watch, a state-surveillance watchdog involved in the case against GCHQ, described https://twitter.com/BigBrotherWatch/status/1397186423174967307 the court’s ruling as “a finding that vindicates @Snowden’s whistleblowing.”
Snowden himself downplayed his own significance. “Without journalists to tell the story, the public would not have known about it. Without human right lawyers defending that public, the courts would not have cared about it. Without those courts, politicians would still be denying it,” he tweeted, adding “I could not have done this alone.”
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https://twitter.com/Snowden/status/1397197409432784903
However, Snowden remains in exile in Moscow, and is still wanted by US authorities on espionage charges. With his passport canceled by Washington, Russia remains a safe haven for Snowden, and earlier this year he applied for Russian citizenship. Following the ECHR’s verdict, Big Brother Watch Director Silkie Carlo called https://twitter.com/BigBrotherWatch/status/1397186605518098435 on European leaders to protect Snowden, saying that he “clearly deserves the protection of democratic nations across Europe for his selfless defence of human rights.”
Yet even if Snowden were to have a passport, leaving Russia would be fraught with danger. Back in 2013, Bolivian President Evo Morales found his plane forced to land in Austria after officials in France, Italy and Spain closed their airspace due to a tip-off https://greenwald.substack.com/p/as-anger-toward-belarus-mounts-recall that Snowden was on board. Snowden was in fact in Moscow, and the US is believed to have been behind the tip-off and grounding.
Snowden’s supporters have long called for his pardoning, and in the final days of the Trump administration, rumors circulated https://www.rt.com/usa/513025-trump-pressure-pardon-assange/ that the Republican president would grant him, and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a pardon – if for no other reason than a shared animosity toward the US’ intelligence agencies and ‘deep state’. However, a pardon never materialized, and the Biden administration has given zero indication that it will entertain the idea.
Nevertheless, calls for a pardon proliferated online after the ECHR’s ruling.
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https://twitter.com/Cov3raa/status/1397209928402669576
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https://twitter.com/_JonathanClarke/status/1397198562757419021
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https://twitter.com/civorep/status/1397199156846944259
Note
(1) Government Communications Headquarters, commonly known as GCHQ, is an intelligence and security organisation responsible for providing signals intelligence and information assurance to the government and armed forces of the United Kingdom. Wikipedia
